I just watched this interesting video based on Leedskalnin theories. He describes how he thinks there is no electron and shows a helium gas lattice. The lattice is what struck me when you hear Stan talk about the same thing. He talks about how the "Magnetrons" can move through the lattice.
Perhaps Helium is a good EPG gas?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQAzVHLP2Wg
Nate
If you have two or lets say three nucleus in thier original state before combining 2 oxygen atoms and one hydrogen atom combining together to make H20 for example. Are these nucleus combined into one nucleus with two south pole and two north pole magnotrons circling the one "new" nucleus to keep it combined together as water?
Do the south poles and north poles of the individual oxygen atoms and the hydrogen nuclues north and south poles all combine together to make a larger magnetic field to hold all three nucleus "fuse" together to make just "one" nucleus atom? If so do the south poles from the individual nucleus atoms combine with the opisite poles of the other atoms? So the nucleus of the hydrogen atom two south poles combine with the two north poles of the nucleus of the oxygen atom and the two north poles of the hydrogen atom combine with the two south poles of the oxygen atom to be a larger more magnetic pole for both the south and north poles? And then when the two stronger north poles and south poles combine with the new nucleus of another oxygen atom north poles and south poles to combine with an even stronger magentic field to hold the new atom all together to form an H20 water molecule? So I guess I am asking do the poles combine to create a stronger magnetic north and south pole or stay seperate at all times and just increase the amount of magnetic energy in a seperate state and never combine?
or is the three nucleus over laying each (combined together next to each other but still as seperate atoms) with each atom having its own north poles and south poles, for each atom, holding it together to make H20? So the "indivdual" H20 atom would have two hydrogen atoms with each atom having 2 north poles and two south poles and one oxygen atom of having two north poles and two south poles? So the entire nucleus of the H20 water atoms would have a total of 12 magnetic (6 north and 6 south) poles orbiting the atoms holding it together?
So when the nucleus of each atom get ripped apart if the poles are combined together the poles magentism is then seperated to equal that of what it was before they combined "together" in its original state of each nucleus having its original two south and two north poles?
Sorry for the lengthy drawn out question. I have no idea if my question even makes any sense to anyone but in my own twisted mind it makes perfect sense.
I am only asking because to make heat from rubbing hands or two sticks together and increasing energy for heat takes frequency. The frequency of me moving my hands together faster or the two sticks together faster. The faster I frequency the more energy and heat produced. Am I removing, dislodging, vibrating, repositioning the north and south poles to create that energy?
I could go on forever with questions so I should leave it there for now but what happens to the nucleus of the atoms if the poles are removed all together? or is that even possible?
Thanks,
Scott